Monday, July 29, 2024

A County First!

 Sitting at the computer in our small bedroom on Wednesday lunchtime last week, it was a busy work day. There were so many emails and calls that I rarely came up for air, so I hadn't checked my WhatsApp messages for a while when I finally picked the phone up. 

A short message seemed a bit confused followed with equally confused responses about a Lesser / Mongolian / Tibetan/ Siberian Sand Plover on the stony beach at Lynemouth with Ringed Plovers. Any of those would be a British tick for me and new for Northumberland but these had been followed with a single photo, that to me, initially, showed a longer bill, that would indicate Great Sand Plover. Not a new bird for me, but a County First all the same.

Now, had I been in the office, I would have been 10 minutes away, but from home its 40 mins and the bird had flown south.

Still the work came through apace so my intended early 3pm finish dragged on til after 5pm. 

By then the bird, now reidentified as a Greater Sand Plover had been relocated around the next headland at Beacon Point, Newbiggin, a pattern it would repeat going forward.

Visions of a lot of birders and toggers booting the plover up and down the coast made me decide not to go on Wednesday evening but just leave it, keeping my fingers crossed for the Thursday when I would be based just around the corner in Ashington. Hopefully it would linger, it is 'autumn' after all...

Thursday, early doors I see from my phone that the Greater Sand Plover was still present  but has again flown from its roost on Lynemouth beach towards Beacon Point again where it was being looked for. 

That would be my first port of call. The car was left on a nearby housing estate as near as possible to the site where a short march across the golf course put me with a group of a dozen or so hopefuls.

Soon enough, the bird was found on the rocky shore where it would do a pop up act by appearing then vanishing in equal measure. I gave it half an hour and decided to have a better look at high tide after work.

4pm found me at Lynemouth Power Station where a walk of about half a mile over a brownfield area got me to the blast beach where the birds were roosting. The industrial landscape here is more like Teesside than Northumberland but its a good spot for migrants and other wildlife too. 

At the spot there were only about 6 of us at the beginning and by the time I left I was alone. I was able to watch the bird well and at a nice distance, enough to stop them being anxious and close enough for good scope views. A few notes and sketches were made and some phone scoped photos taken as a record of the bird. 

Later on at home a scan of some literature showed a minefield of taxonomic issues with the Sand Plover complex but comparing my notes with details it looked to be of the Central Asian race 'scythicus' all the way froTurkmenistan through S Kazakhstan and Afghanistan wintering in SE Africa

An older paper in BB refers to the 'crassirostris' race ( now changed in name only to 'scythicus' )...

 Bill - As nominate, but on average somewhat longer and thinner.   ( It was slim and quite long)

Upperparts - Paler grey-brown, usually lacking rufous-cinnamon tinge, but may show narrow rufous feather margins. (It was heavily abraded so no rufous finging)

Face Mask - Wider and complete, with white forehead patch small or absent .( It was only a few small dots in a line)

 Breast Band -  Broader, less sharply demarcated and generally paler, but with narrow centre  and rufous often extending obscurely to flanks .

Border to Breast Band - Sometimes present as thin black line; often absent.  ( It had a faint black line along the edge to the throat).

So there you have it, my 2nd UK GSP after one at Aberlady in June 1999, takes my county list to 364 until the Redpolls go!

Note - 30/07/24 I see Bird Guides are putting this out as the Eastern race 'leschenaultii' so I've looked again to see where I'm going wrong. Ive coloured positives in green and negatives in red.

Bill - Strong, with curved nail and obvious, angled gonys ( Bill didnt seem strong or have a gonys?)

Upperparts - Usually ‘clean’ grey-brown, often lacking cinnamon tinge, and thus similar to Lesser Sand Plover, but may show narrow rufous margins. ( Yes like this)

Mask - Variable, but occasionally fully black ( Fits)

Breast Band - Narrow at centre and deeper rufous, hardly extending to lower breast or onto flanks; also more sharply demarcated ( Doesnt look sharply demarcated to me or particularly deeper rufous)

Border to breast band - Normally lacking ( Definitely had a fine line bordering)

As with all of these complex species, the descriptions or parts are fluid and extremely variable. No doubt the BirdGuides Team have access to more expert up to date info than myself...Every day is a school day!









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